Hi!
Although I skipped
last week post, this is the 1st
month of PS! J
Smiling cupcake time:
And for today’s post let me talk about this paper of Sorek and Cossart. You have to pay to get it, but I have it, so if you feel
like reading, email me...... did I just say that?.
So, Sorek and Cossart discuss some findings that have been
reported by studying transcriptomes of bacteria. They also spend a couple of
paragraphs describing the main approaches for transcriptome studies, RNA-Seq
and tilling arrays.
First of all, let us clarify what transcriptomes are. From
all the definitions I've read, the one that I liked the most (although I don’t remember
where I read it, sorry) said that a transcriptome is the dynamic part of a
genome. After getting the genome of an organism, the whole research thing doesn't
stop there, you have to know where are those genes located, and most
importantly what are they doing and how do they interact with themselves and
the environment. That information you get it from a transcriptome analysis.
So, for years many eukaryotes have been widely studied, and
there are several genomes and transcriptomes available for model eukaryotes.
And as usual, bacterias and archaeas were overlooked. Mainly because of that
old belief that microorganisms, for being small, are simple and insignificant (well, poor things, what can I say, sometimes that is also believed of short people, or kids). But guess what?!! that is not only wrong, it is WRONG!!!
But that was not the only reason; actually it is more
difficult to study transcriptomes of bacteria than those of eukaryotes. Again,
more development is there for techniques to work with eukaryotes. In bacteria
the major problem is the need to enrich mRNA in the sample. Prokaryotes lack
the 3'-end polyA tail, and >95% of the RNA is ribosomal RNA and you need
mRNA, the other 5%. But now it is possible to enrich mRNA and Sorek explains a bit of this process in this really cool paper.
As I told you, the
two main approaches that have been used to study transcripts in prokaryotes are
RNA-seq and tilling arrays. RNA-seq can be done in several of the platforms
available (you know SOLiD, Illumina, etc etc). First you extract your RNA and
synthesize cDNA by reverse transcriptase (RT). As bacteria don't have the polyA
tail, then some priming step has to be there for RT to work, with oligo(dt),
random hexamers or artificial poly adenylation. Then, don’t forget the fact
that we need mRNA and it is only a 5% of the sample. So, several methods are
there for enrichment, and in Sorek and Cossart paper they are briefly explained. Here they are :
- rRNA capture with magnetic beads, so at the end you remove the beads and the sample ends up being mRNA
- degradation of the 5’P RNAs, so mRNAs in bacteria have an analogous to the cap in eukaryotes, a 5’PPP (triphosphate). So the idea is to get rid of all those RNA species, tRNA and rRNA, that does not have a 5’PPP.
- Polyadenylation of mRNA. Here an artificial polyA is added.
- Capture the undesirable RNAs with Hfq, a very famous protein originally discovered in E. coli that binds to RNA.
I do not know if there are more enrichment methods. Details
about each of these I've told you are presented in the paper, and some other references are suggested in
case you want to learn more. Authors also give the name of the kits to do all
these protocols, you know, if there are two people in the world doing same
thing, there should be a kit for that.
So, once you have your mRNA, you get your cDNA libraries,
and again, several methods are there for doing this. And the final output of the RNA-seq are
millions of reads (from 20 to 200 bp), that you use to align to a reference
genome, and the expression of the genes is measured depending of how many reads
are aligned to that particular region in the genome.
And in the other method, tiling arrays, after the cDNA
synthesis, the library is hybridized to an array and expression is measured using
signal intensities. Enrichment is not necessary here. So both methods require a reference genome, and tilling arrays
do not need an enrichment step. Several prokaryotic transcriptomes that have already been completed using these methods include: Listeria
monocytogens, Bacillus subtilis, Halobacterium salinarum, Burkholderia
canocepacia, Listeria monocytogens, E. coli, Salmonella, Sulpholobus solfataricus…
And what all people found, in general, is that prokaryotic
transcriptomes are decidedly complex. Gene structures had to be remodeled as new genes were discovered and specially important ncRNA (non coding RNAs that are well know
to play key roles in regulation of gene expression) were found. In this paper they mentioned one study
(Wurtzel et al), in which they found 162 transcription start sites equivocally
annotated. Although I don't know exactly why ORFs are usually predicted upstream of
their actual places, this clearly shows how useful transcriptomes are.
Also, several riboswitches structures (you can read more
about riboswitches in this previous PS) were discovered. It looks like 2% of bacterial genes are under riboswitch-mechanisms control. The
detection of riboswitches is done by analyzing contiguous regions of the 5’UTRs
at different conditions, when expression of such regions is interrupted at one
growth condition and not in the other, you have spotted a riboswitch. Although
this is a paper from 2010, an important comment they did is that there should be
more focus on the 3'UTRs, especially in the case of archaea, which were already
reported to have 3'UTR with regulatory roles. It'd be nice to find out what has
been done in this regard in the last three years.
And now, to almost conclude this post, the most exciting (in
my very personal point of view) part of the paper: gene plasticity. In this
paper I found the reference of an experiment conducted in 2007,
in which Mycoplasma pneumoniae was
grown in 173 different conditions (woooth?!! ….... well, this shouldn't surprise
us, we know someone who likes experiments of 100+ reactors ;)
So in this study, the found that operons (the bacterial
genes) act in an homologous way to eukaryote genes, emulating alternative
splicing… although, bacteria were here before eukaryotes, should we say that
eukaryotes are emulating bacteria?
Probably, yes. In this study of the oh-so-many-conditions
they saw that polycistronic regions can be transcribed as monocistronic when
conditions varied, so, from one part with many genes, sometimes only one was
expressed. So operons are versatile entities. And it looks like archaea act similar.
So, who is copying who?
Another important discoveries were the definition of some
ncRNAs in critical processes such as quorum sensing (more
about this amazing bacterial signaling processes here) and the antisense
transcription of some genes. So, isn't this cool? Although they are small, with
small chromosomes and everything, prokaryotes overlap their genes, and it looks
like "this is the rule, rather than the exception".
I would like to keep writing, but this post is already too
long. Please, check out the paper and if you have any comments, leave them down
below these lines ↓.
thanks.
thanks.
1 comment:
Sorek, R., and Cossart, P. 2010. Prokaryotic transcriptomics: a new view on regulation, physiology and pathogenicity. Nat. Rev. Genet. 11 (1): 9-16.
please I really would love to read the paper.. could you plz share your email ID
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